Abstract
Background
Tele-assessments are becoming increasingly important to increase access to healthcare services and facilitate patient follow-up. Whether they can provide results with similar accuracy to face-to-face assessments remains relevant.
Objective
The aim of this study was to compare the face-to-face and tele-assessment scores of the International Cooperative Ataxia Rating Scale (ICARS) and Assessment and Rating of Ataxia (SARA) in ataxic MS patients and to examine their suitability for tele-assessment.
Methods
The participants were assessed both online and face-to-face. Randomization determined which method would be used first to assess the participants. ICARS and SARA were used in the assessments. Face-to-face assessments were conducted as part of routine clinical practice by one researcher, while teleassessments were performed via real-time video by two different researchers. The video was recorded and reassessed one week later. The agreement and correlation between face-to-face and teleassessments were analyzed using intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC), Bland–Altman Plots, and Pearson's/Spearman's correlation coefficients.
Results
This study included 20 patients with ataxic MS with an EDSS score of 3.6 ± 0.66. The inter-rater reliability of tele-assessments (ICCICARS = 0.97; ICCSARA = 0.97) achieved excellent reliability. Intra-rater reliability of the tele-assessment was excellent (ICCICARS = 0.99; ICCSARA = 0.99). High correlations were observed in ICARS and SARA scores between face-to-face and tele-assessment methods according to assessors (r > .80 for all).
Conclusion
ICARS and SARA are reliable and agreed-upon tests that can be used with tele-assessments, offering similar data to face-to-face methods.
Keywords
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